Cerebral Ischemia Produces Laddered DNA Fragments Distinct from Cardiac Ischemia and Archetypal Apoptosis

Abstract
The electrophoretic pattern of laddered DNA fragments which has been observed after cerebral ischemia is considered to indicate that neurons are dying by apoptosis. Herein the authors directly demonstrate using ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction methods that 99% of the DNA fragments produced after either global or focal ischemia in adult rats, or produced after hypoxia-ischemia in neonatal rats, have staggered ends with a 3' recess of approximately 8 to 10 nucleotides. This is in contrast to archetypal apoptosis in which the DNA fragments are blunt ended as seen during developmental programmed cell death in dying cortical neurons, neuroblastoma, or thymic lymphocytes. It is not simply ischemia that results in staggered ends in DNA fragments because ischemic myocardium is similar to archetypal apoptosis with a vast majority of blunt-ended fragments. It is concluded that the endonucleases that produce this staggered fragmentation of the DNA backbone in ischemic brain must be different than those of classic or type I apoptosis.